Gregory Jennifer F, Taylor Elizabeth A, Liu Yizhen E, Love Tracy V, Raiciulescu Sorana, Meyerle Jon H
Department of Dermatology, National Capital Consortium, 8901 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, MD.
Department of Flight Medicine, Tinker Air Force Base, Oklahoma City, OK.
Mil Med. 2019 Dec 1;184(11-12):889-893. doi: 10.1093/milmed/usz110.
Skin diseases have had a significant impact on the health of deployed military service members throughout history. Given the high prevalence historically of cutaneous disease among United States deployed servicemembers, we review the burden of skin disease on the modern military by analyzing the most common dermatologic diagnoses made in deployed settings from 2008 to 2015. Furthermore, we compare the most common dermatologic diagnoses made in the deployed setting with those made by dermatologists and nondermatologists in the civilian healthcare system to highlight the differences between the civilian and deployed military practice environment.
This study queried the Theater Medical Data Store for International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD-9) codes to determine the total number of dermatologic encounters as part of all medical encounters from 2008 to 2015 in a deployed setting. These data were provided by the Armed Forces Health Surveillance Branch. For all statistical tests, analyses were conducted using R statistical software, with type I error controlled at 5%.
From 2008 to 2015, 92 dermatology-specific ICD-9 codes accounted for 429,837 dermatologic diagnoses that were made in a deployed setting, equating to 10% of all diagnoses. The top 20 dermatologic diagnoses were identified, and the percentage of total medical diagnoses (TMD) was calculated. Once the individual diagnoses were categorized, a direct comparison was made between the top 20 most prevalent disease categories among deployed military servicemembers and those of the United States (US) population as a whole, based on claims. The most prevalent diagnoses were compared amongst four different settings: Deployed military, military teledermatology, civilian dermatologists, and civilian nondermatologists. Overall comparison of the prevalence between each of these groups showed an association between setting and diagnosis prevalence.
The total burden of disease based on diagnostic codes from 2008 to 2015 is 429,837 diagnoses. This accounts for 10% of TMD from 2008 to 2015 in the deployed setting. Diagnoses most prevalent in the deployed military setting had more in common with those made by civilian nondermatologists compared with military teledermatology and civilian dermatologists. At 10% of diagnoses made in the deployed military setting in this timeframe, skin disease accounts for a substantial burden on deployed servicemembers. Deployed servicemembers with skin disease should be supported through use of teledermatology resources and improved dermatology education for primary care and deployed medical personnel.
纵观历史,皮肤病对部署在海外的军人健康产生了重大影响。鉴于美国部署在海外的军人中皮肤病的历史患病率较高,我们通过分析2008年至2015年在部署环境中做出的最常见皮肤病诊断,来审视现代军队中皮肤病的负担。此外,我们将部署环境中最常见的皮肤病诊断与民用医疗系统中皮肤科医生和非皮肤科医生做出的诊断进行比较,以突出民用和部署军队医疗实践环境之间的差异。
本研究查询了战区医疗数据存储库中的国际疾病分类第九版(ICD - 9)编码,以确定2008年至2015年在部署环境中作为所有医疗诊疗一部分的皮肤病诊疗总数。这些数据由武装部队健康监测处提供。对于所有统计测试,使用R统计软件进行分析,将I类错误控制在5%。
2008年至2015年,92个特定于皮肤科的ICD - 9编码占部署环境中做出的429,837例皮肤病诊断,相当于所有诊断的10%。确定了前20种皮肤病诊断,并计算了总医疗诊断(TMD)的百分比。一旦对个体诊断进行分类,就根据索赔情况对部署的军人中最常见的20种疾病类别与美国总体人群的疾病类别进行直接比较。在四种不同环境中比较了最常见的诊断:部署的军队、军队远程皮肤病学、民用皮肤科医生和民用非皮肤科医生。这些组中每组患病率的总体比较显示了环境与诊断患病率之间的关联。
基于2008年至2015年诊断编码的疾病总负担为429,837例诊断。这占2008年至2015年部署环境中TMD的10%。与军队远程皮肤病学和民用皮肤科医生相比,部署军队环境中最常见的诊断与民用非皮肤科医生做出的诊断有更多共同之处。在这个时间段内,皮肤病占部署军人诊断的10%,给部署军人带来了沉重负担。应通过使用远程皮肤病学资源以及改善对初级保健和部署医务人员的皮肤病学教育,来为患有皮肤病的部署军人提供支持。